Luxury items like high-end cars and demerit goods including tobacco, pan masala and aerated drinks, will be taxed at the highest rate and would also attract a cess in a way that the total incidence of tax remains at almost the current level.
With a view to safeguarding the interest of poor and keeping inflation under check, half the items in CPI basket like foodgrains, would not be taxed at all, while there would be two standard tax rates of 12 and 18 per cent.
After differences kept away a consensus on the issue at the last meeting, the all-powerful GST Council, headed by Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, has decided to impose an additional cess. It would be the difference between the current incidence and the 28 per cent rate, not leading to increase in the final taxation.
Tobacco currently attracts about 65 per cent total tax and for aerated drinks the current rate is about 40 per cent.
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"...Finally the consensus is that these items, with cascading effect of 30-31 per cent, will now be taxed at 28 per cent, but with a rider. And the rider is that in this category there are several items which are now being used increasingly by a very large number of people, particularly the lower middle class. So for them 28 or 30 or 31 per cent rate will be higher, and so we are transferring them to 18 per cent," Jaitley told reporters here.
Chief Economic Advisor Arvind Subramanian said the rate structure "should probably serve to lower inflation...And should probably bring it down."
For most items, GST will be excise duty plus VAT and that incidence will decide on which tax bracket particular goods or items fall into.